James Spithill masters huge waves to foil from New York to Bermuda
James Spithill has revealed the extraordinary lengths him and his crew went through to sail their โF4โ Team Falcon catamaran over 1,065km of open ocean.
The ORACLE Team USA skipper had to wait patiently for the green light with the ocean quest postponed several times by a hurricane and gale force winds. The weather relented on November 5 so Spithill and his team of Shannon Falcone, who dreamt up the challenge, Rome Kirby, Tommy Loughborough, Cy Thompson and Bermudaโs own Emily Nagel could set out from New York.
Unfortunately for them, the conditions soon turned nasty and they had to fight tooth and nail to combat massive 25 foot waves and phenomenal 35-knot winds. Luckily the eight months spent engineering the first ever 46-foot hydro-foiling catamaran ensured that they could hover a few feet over the dangerous swells.
They eventually managed to complete the journey from New York, the first U.S. city to host the Americaโs Cup in 1870, to Bermuda, where the 35th Americaโs Cup will be held in the summer of 2017, in 66 hours.
Australian Spithill revealed, โWe went from pushing the boat for performance into survival mode. These were the biggest waves Iโve faced in a multi-hull and hopefully donโt ever have to experience again! At night we didnโt have a moon. Some of the waves were breaking, which made it very challenging and extremely dangerous, and we had a few close calls.“
โWhen the stress and fatigue levels climb so high and you need to make the right calls as a skipper, that is when you push yourself and your development”.
โI love taking on Mother Nature. You have to be ready for anything. Mother Nature can turn and, when she does, it can be awesome as well as terrifying.โ
Falcone added, โIn 72 hours, we experienced more than a lot of sailors experience in their whole career. I was so impressed with Emily, and the entire team bonded because of the challenges and adversities.โ
Finally Nagel declared, โI couldn’t quite believe I was on a boat with the ORACLE Team USA guys and Shannon. The learning curve with that kind of experience is just incredible.โ
Sorely lacking in details. Complete waste of time to read this article.